Thursday, January 14, 2010

Welcome to Poetry Friday!

Welcome to Poetry Friday, a weekly event hosted by the Kidlitosphere online community. Below you'll find a wonderful treasure of resources to share great poety with children. I also have a review of an inspirational poetic picture book, Our Children Can Soar. My review of this books follows.

I would like to encourage everyone to check out the 2009 Cybils Poetry Finalists. The Cybils awards are given each year by the online kidlit blogging community. They are given to books that have both excellent literary merit and outstanding kid appeal. They're a terrific bunch of books, well worth seeking out. The finalists are:

As we celebrate Martin Luther King, Jr. this weekend, I would like to highlight the inspirational book Our Children Can Soar: A Celebration of Rosa, Barack, and the Pioneers of Change. Thirteen leading African American artists collaborated to honor the achievements of African Americans, paying tribute to 10 individuals, including George Washington Carver, Ruby Bridges, and Jackie Robinson. These individual's accomplishments are shown linked together, in a way part of a seamless continuum building on one another. The illustrations are each in a different style, recognizing the unique work of each artist. For more on what it meant to the artists, see Jules' interviews at Seven Impossible Things.

Our Children Can Soar is certainly striking for its illustrations (striking is an understatement - amazing, is more like it), but the poetic text also lends to its power. The simple patterned text is so effective because it repeats the central mantra that each of these figures did what they did so that their children could stand on their shoulders.

Rosa sat so
Martin could march.
Martin marched so
Thurgood could rule
Thurgood ruled so
Barack could run.
Barack ran so
Our children can soar!

As Doret wrote at The Happy Nappy Bookseller, "It takes the reader through the cumulative story of the US Civil Rights Movement, expanding the popular slogan beyond these three heroes to include more key players in the struggle for equality. Spare prose and vivid imagery make this a truly moving and accessible picture book to be savored by readers of all ages."

You can find Our Children Can Soar at a local public library with WorldCat. I would love feedback to see if this link helps you find this at a library near you. It is also available in bookstores and Amazon.

We have many new reviews and poems to share today. If you have a review, please leave a comment and link below or email me at greatkidbooks (at) gmail.com. I will update these throughout the day.

Charles Ghigna shares an original poem, "A Poem Is A Metaphor" on his Father Goose blog.

Bookie Woogie reviewed The Cuckoo's Haiku, and the Z-Kids were inspired to write some great bird haiku of their own.

Irene Latham celebratres her 500th post with "To a Skylark" by Percy Bysshe Shelley found on page 500 of the book she'd want with heron a deserted island: The Top 500 Poems, edited by William Harmon. Hearty congratulations for 500 posts!

ShelfElf reminds us that hope matters so much, especially this week, sharing the poem "“Hope” is the thing with feathers" by Emily Dickinson.

Jeannine Atkins writes about how Margarita Engle blends poetry and verse with her novels-in-verse.

Brian Jung, aka Mr. Chompchomp, shares one of his favorite poems for January, "These" by William Carlos Williams, found on PoemHunter. As he writes, it seems especially fitting right now as we face "desolate, dark weeks / when nature in its barrenness / equals the stupidity of man"

Martha Calderaro also shares a poem that helps her reflect about the tragic earthquake in Haiti. She shares Marilyn Singer’s poem “Wells” from her collection How to Cross a Pond: Poems about Water

Welcome to Kathy B at Forwords Books - this is her first Poetry Friday. She is recommending several books for for Tu B'Shevat, the Jewish birthday of the trees, including a Cybils finalist: The Tree That Time Built.

At Becky's Book Reviews, Becky is sharing a speech from Julius Cesear by William Shakespeare from Manga Shakespeare's edition of Julius Caesar.

At Wild Rose Reader, Elaine Magliaro shares "Mouse: An Original Acrostic Poem". Over at Blue Rose Girls, Elaine also also shares "Winter Dusk," by Walter de la Mare.

At Bildungsroman, Little Willow has posted an Emily Dickinson poem: "The pedigree of honey."

At A Year of Reading, Mary Lee has sent a poem about making mistakes by Fleur Adcock.

That's all, folks. Thanks so much for sharing great poetry.

Please note: if you click on the Amazon links for the Cybils finalists, the Amazon Associate links will contribute a small percentage toward the Cybils organization. If you click on a link on my review, a small percentage will go toward Great Kid Books.

Yes! Our Children Can Soar is a great choice. Thanks for the mention and thanks for hosting.I'm celebrating my 500th post with the poem found on page 500 of the book I'd want with me on a deserted island. http://irenelatham.blogspot.com/2010/01/celebrate-post-500.htmlThanks!

This is my first time participating in Poetry Friday. I am thrilled to see that "The Tree that Time Built" is a Cybils finalist. It is one of the books I am recommending for Tu B'Shevat, the Jewish birthday of the trees, at http://forwordsbooks.com/bal-tashchit-do-not-be-wasteful/.

How ironic. My poem is about making mistakes, and...I forgot to send in my link first thing this morning! I'm not feeling guilty, though, just shaking my head a little. Seems par for the course this week...